⚡ Energy Bill Split Calculator for a £75 Bill split between 5 People

Split energy bills fairly between housemates.

Quick answer

A £75 energy bill split between 5 people is £15.00 each.

  • 5 people: £15.00 each
  • 2 people: £37.50 each
  • 3 people: £25.00 each
  • 4 people: £18.75 each

In detail: Energy Bill Split Calculator for a £75 Bill split between 5 People

Splitting a £75 energy bill 5 ways at £15.00 each works cleanly only if usage is roughly equal. In reality, the person who works from home, runs the tumble dryer, or takes longer showers drives disproportionate usage — worth having an open conversation rather than assuming strict equality is fair.

A £75 monthly bill for 5 people is below the UK average — either the property is small, well-insulated, or everyone is out of the house during the day. Worth checking that the direct debit isn't under-estimated; ending the year with a big shortfall is a common nasty surprise.

For houseshares, the fairest setup is often a shared account with everyone paying a fixed monthly contribution that's reconciled quarterly against actuals — avoids arguments and catches meter-reading errors early.

What this tool helps with

Each person's share of the energy bill

What you can enter

  • Total energy bill (£): 75
  • Number of people in house: 5
  • Split method: Equal split

Why this page is useful

Split energy bills fairly between housemates. This page loads fast, gives a direct answer, and then expands with useful context instead of burying the result under filler.

Frequently Asked Questions

A £75 energy bill split between 5 people is £15.00 each.
5 people: £15.00 each • 2 people: £37.50 each • 3 people: £25.00 each • 4 people: £18.75 each
Splitting a £75 energy bill 5 ways at £15.00 each works cleanly only if usage is roughly equal. In reality, the person who works from home, runs the tumble dryer, or takes longer showers drives disproportionate usage — worth having an open conversation rather than assuming strict equality is fair.
A £75 monthly bill for 5 people is below the UK average — either the property is small, well-insulated, or everyone is out of the house during the day. Worth checking that the direct debit isn't under-estimated; ending the year with a big shortfall is a common nasty surprise.
Equal split is simplest. If rooms differ in size or someone works from home, percentage-based is fairer.
Council tax is usually split equally unless someone qualifies for a discount.